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which isn't rocket science. it's just common sense. from td ameritrade. >>> the headlines on friday looked great. unemployment rate drops to 7.7%. 146,000 americans score new jobs, but those headlines don't tell the whole story. christine romans is here to share the breakdown of that report. >> let's go beyond the headline and look deep inside these numbers at say the unemployment rate. the underemployment rate. 41.1% of people out of work have been out of work for six months or longer. that starts to become a real big problem for the economy when these people are left behind. underemployment still high. 14.4%. some call this the real unemployment rate. it's almost double what that headline number is. another big problem. let's look in the sectors that are hiring. retail jobs. 53,000. all of those retailers hiring up for the holiday season, but many of those jobs are temporary and it's kind of hard to send a kid to college on the -- many of those retail jobs and there aren't always benefits. some place where they are benefits if you lo
which isn't rocket science. it's just common sense. from td ameritrade. >>> the headlines on friday looked great. unemployment rate drops to 7.7%. 146,000 americans score new jobs, but those headlines don't tell the whole story. christine romans is here to share the breakdown of that report. >> let's go beyond the headline and look deep inside these numbers at say the unemployment rate. the underemployment rate. 41.1% of people out of work have been out of work for six months or...
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can solve this because what science does is it makes it so that you don't actually have to treat the disease because you've detected it early or you've prevented it. >> right. i think about vaccination, how we've eradicated it on that basis and the cost of vaccination versus the advance care that's needed to deal with the sequelae, the side effects of that particular condition. so in cancer alone, 50% of cancers are preventable just from prevention strategies of dealing with proper nutrition, not smoking, protection, and a variety of other strategies. >> can private money, can private sector fund these kinds of advances that you're describing? >> there's no question. i mean on several levels. individuals giving gifts and contributions, very important. but also having a synergistic interactions with a commercial entity. for example, if we develop a drug that actually has an impact on a disease, we can license that drug to a pharmaceutical company and we get a return on the investment that we plow back into our mission. >> so in this atmosphere of budget cutting and, you know, concerns
can solve this because what science does is it makes it so that you don't actually have to treat the disease because you've detected it early or you've prevented it. >> right. i think about vaccination, how we've eradicated it on that basis and the cost of vaccination versus the advance care that's needed to deal with the sequelae, the side effects of that particular condition. so in cancer alone, 50% of cancers are preventable just from prevention strategies of dealing with proper...
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straightforward guidance and be able to focus on other things, like each other, which isn't rocket science. it's just common sense. from td ameritrade. >>> left viewers on a cliff hanger. raising the specter you may be gay. are you? >> maybe unconsciously. i just got married to a woman. >> she's a beautiful woman. she's got you in spectacular shape. >> obviously i feel funny saying this because a lot of people would say this about their wives but i'm very lucky. she's the most special person. she is such a wonderful opportunity for me as a person to grow. she's helped me so much and not just in terms of this physical health and nutrition. the number one thing i gave up was sugar. a fit and relatively lean and healthy person. i started to go off this deep end and started to get more and more swollen. i did exercise. when someone explained to me, and this is very important, it was not so much about my lack of discipline or my kind of bad behavior but i was sick. i was prediabetic. if i addressed it that way therein lied the cure. i gave up eating sugar and i lost 35 pounds in a year. >> are
straightforward guidance and be able to focus on other things, like each other, which isn't rocket science. it's just common sense. from td ameritrade. >>> left viewers on a cliff hanger. raising the specter you may be gay. are you? >> maybe unconsciously. i just got married to a woman. >> she's a beautiful woman. she's got you in spectacular shape. >> obviously i feel funny saying this because a lot of people would say this about their wives but i'm very lucky. she's...
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>> reporter: at the houston museum of natural science, not concern but a lot of curiosity. >> yeah, it was going so fast, it actually gets through the atmosphere, that makes the flow. >> reporter: the museum's astronomer suspects it's a meteorite, a small piece of rock burning through space. fit meets the criteria. >> did it make a trail? did it actually move? did it change color? did it move from east to west? >> reporter: a lot of scientists searching for explanation to what's called the fireball over texas, a lot of people who aren't scientists as well. >> i've heard so many different things about, you know, 2012. so it's kind of scary because it's getting closer to that day. >> a nasa expert says it may have been a meteor. national weather service says it was probably just space junk. there you go. >>> his architectural masterpieces speak for themselves. oscar niedermayer's spread across the country of brazil. next why his legacy will go on long after his death. our abundant natural gas is already saving us money, producing cleaner electricity, putting us to work here in america an
>> reporter: at the houston museum of natural science, not concern but a lot of curiosity. >> yeah, it was going so fast, it actually gets through the atmosphere, that makes the flow. >> reporter: the museum's astronomer suspects it's a meteorite, a small piece of rock burning through space. fit meets the criteria. >> did it make a trail? did it actually move? did it change color? did it move from east to west? >> reporter: a lot of scientists searching for...
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and the science is in the special fabric. you don't need a power source or some instruction manual to make it work. theoretically, any soldier, even in the most remote location, could quickly put it on and put it to work. chris lawrence, cnn, the pen gone. >> pretty remarkable. >> i'll say. >>> 45 minutes past the hour. a check on some of the morning's top stories ahead, including a turf war on the internet. why your photo of today's breakfast may not reach as many people. oh, the humanity of it. i'm freaked out about this. i can't wait to talk more about it. >>> watch us anytime on your desktop or mobile phone, go to cnn.com/tv. . [ engine revs ] ♪ [ derek ] 272 horsepower. the lightest in its class. the cadillac ats outmatches the bmw 3 series. i cannot believe i have ended the day not scraping some red paint off on these barriers. ♪ [ male announcer ] the all-new cadillac ats. in that time there've been some good days. and some difficult ones. but, through it all, we've persevered, supporting some of the biggest ideas
and the science is in the special fabric. you don't need a power source or some instruction manual to make it work. theoretically, any soldier, even in the most remote location, could quickly put it on and put it to work. chris lawrence, cnn, the pen gone. >> pretty remarkable. >> i'll say. >>> 45 minutes past the hour. a check on some of the morning's top stories ahead, including a turf war on the internet. why your photo of today's breakfast may not reach as many people....
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." >> art is what can't be proven mathematically, right, it's where science ends. it's the part that makes you feel good but you don't know why it the way the object feels or looks. you can almost if it's perfectly created explain it to someone else afterwards but in the creation part you can't. you can see how the glass is constantly moving. my job is to basically shape it. balance it at the same time. if you do that, you get these wonderful shapes. glass really rewards risk. a lot of times with glass, you're just waiting for the piece to cool down or the temperature to adjust it and then there's these split seconds where you've got a fraction of a second to make a particular movement a particular way and you don't get to repeat it if you do it wrong. there's a performance to it. it's sort of like dancing. you can't really think about it and do it well. you just have to do it enough that it becomes sort of mechanical and then you can sort of free your mind to design. ♪ let's say you want to get ahead in your career. how do you get from here... to here? at univer
." >> art is what can't be proven mathematically, right, it's where science ends. it's the part that makes you feel good but you don't know why it the way the object feels or looks. you can almost if it's perfectly created explain it to someone else afterwards but in the creation part you can't. you can see how the glass is constantly moving. my job is to basically shape it. balance it at the same time. if you do that, you get these wonderful shapes. glass really rewards risk. a lot...
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more than 25,000 teachers and teachers aids could lose their jobs and science and public research grants could be cut including in to cancer and childhood diseases. fewer americans could receive drug abuse treatment and $700 million slashed from the epa budget. cutting back of food inspection. disaster relief, omb says, quote, the federal emergency management administration's ability to respond would be undermined. and finally, from border patrol to hiring new fbi agents, correction officers, federal prosecutors, all could be scaled back. now, all of these cuts, brooke, don't happen exactly at 12:01 a.m. on january 2nd. they happen over the course of a year. but agencies are preparing for an impasse in washington. this is exactly, exactly what policymakers are trying to avoid. brooke? >> thank you. >>> shock waves in washington today. powerful republican senator calling it quits. south carolina's senator jim demint will be stepping down december 31st to lead the heritage foundation. that's a powerful conservative think tank in d.c. demint says he can be more effective outside the senate.
more than 25,000 teachers and teachers aids could lose their jobs and science and public research grants could be cut including in to cancer and childhood diseases. fewer americans could receive drug abuse treatment and $700 million slashed from the epa budget. cutting back of food inspection. disaster relief, omb says, quote, the federal emergency management administration's ability to respond would be undermined. and finally, from border patrol to hiring new fbi agents, correction officers,...
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straightforward guidance and be able to focus on other things, like each other, which isn't rocket science. it's just common sense. from td ameritrade. >>> good morning, everybody. stories we're watching for you now in the newsroom. we're about 40 seconds away from the opening bell at the new york stock exchange. expect cautious investors today when wall street kicks off the trading for the week. fiscal cliff talks and a reserve meeting midweek could shift the markets, bri markets,. ringing the opening bell at the exchange, the financial services company blackrock. >>> hugo chavez returns to cuba to undergo another cancer operation. chavez left in the middle of the night just a day after telling his country the cancer was back. in is his fourth surgery since being diagnosed with cancer last year. >>> today former south african president nelson mandela is facing a day of medical tests in the hospital. the 94-year-old has suffered health problems in recent years. the nation's current president says mandela is doing well but offered no details on his condition. mandela is a nobel laureate who
straightforward guidance and be able to focus on other things, like each other, which isn't rocket science. it's just common sense. from td ameritrade. >>> good morning, everybody. stories we're watching for you now in the newsroom. we're about 40 seconds away from the opening bell at the new york stock exchange. expect cautious investors today when wall street kicks off the trading for the week. fiscal cliff talks and a reserve meeting midweek could shift the markets, bri markets,....